Calling bullshido on ground fighting teachers.

Bullshido.com is a site to fight frauds in martial arts. Teachers or styles that falsely claim the teaching to be street effective, putting students in danger on the street because the teaching does not represent any real life situtation. That we all agree on right? Good.

This is where I call ground fighting schools bullshido. (not the art itself, but the marketing of the art)

Watch this video first, then read what I have to say. This is just ONE example, I've seen the same thing happened soooo many times on the streets.

These kids are not martial artist (yes, I can tell, you don't have to tell me), but the point is, if you watch what happened to the kid that put someone in a choke, it can happen to ALL the ground fighters on the street. The kid got kicked in the head a few times. Fights are always in groups, it is only fair until you start winning, then everyone jumps in.

I am sure this idea has been beaten to death, but no matter how much you want to deny it, BJJ does not work against multiple attackers! And 99% of the time, you won't be attacked by ONE person.

I have read the same arguments, you can get attacked by multiple attackers if you fight from standing up too right? Sure you can, but realize that the mobility of standup fighting maximize your chance of defending yourself. You don't want to position yourself on the ground unless you have to.

I am glad a lot of you are taking BJJ as a secondary art to supplyment your stand up fighting skills, thats great!! But this is where Bullshido comes in:

***********

A lot of people are marketing ground fighting as a primary art for street use!! Instead of a supplyment to stand up fighting. I don't have a problem with ground fighting, it is a MUST for every martial artist. The moves are creative and effective, you can't deny that.

But when you have people claiming BJJ as the BEST art out there, saying things like if you can only affort to learn one art, you have to take BJJ. I believe that is bull ****. If you can only affort to learn one art, BJJ should be the LAST art you want to pick for street use. Stand up fighting should be your primary art, ground fighting should be a supplymental art.

I have talked to a few BJJers (instructors), and most of their mentality is that fights end up on the ground, therefore, you should learn to fight on the ground. Stand up fighting is inferior because BJJers can easily take you to the ground.......it is a very dangerous thing for a person to confuse sports with reality.

I've fought in groups before, me and my friends loved taking cheap shots. So do a lot of people. The reality is, fights are never fair, and never one on one.

If Bullshido means teachers or styles that falsely claim the teaching to be street effective, putting students in danger on the street because the teaching does not represent any real life situtation. Then I am calling Bullshido on BJJ schools, because the "marketing" does not reflect real life situations.

Footnote: I don't have a problem with BJJ (the art itself), just the marketing of the style.

Bullshido.com is a site to fight frauds in martial arts. Teachers or styles that falsely claim the teaching to be street effective, putting students in danger on the street because the teaching does not represent any real life situtation. That we all agree on right? Good.

This is where I call ground fighting schools bullshido. (not the art itself, but the marketing of the art)

Watch this video first, then read what I have to say. This is just ONE example, I've seen the same thing happened soooo many times on the streets.

These kids are not martial artist (yes, I can tell, you don't have to tell me), but the point is, if you watch what happened to the kid that put someone in a choke, it can happen to ALL the ground fighters on the street. The kid got kicked in the head a few times. Fights are always in groups, it is only fair until you start winning, then everyone jumps in.

I am sure this idea has been beaten to death, but no matter how much you want to deny it, BJJ does not work against multiple attackers! And 99% of the time, you won't be attacked by ONE person.

I have read the same arguments, you can get attacked by multiple attackers if you fight from standing up too right? Sure you can, but realize that the mobility of standup fighting maximize your chance of defending yourself. You don't want to position yourself on the ground unless you have to.

I am glad a lot of you are taking BJJ as a secondary art to supplyment your stand up fighting skills, thats great!! But this is where Bullshido comes in:

***********

A lot of people are marketing ground fighting as a primary art for street use!! Instead of a supplyment to stand up fighting. I don't have a problem with ground fighting, it is a MUST for every martial artist. The moves are creative and effective, you can't deny that.

But when you have people claiming BJJ as the BEST art out there, saying things like if you can only affort to learn one art, you have to take BJJ. I believe that is bull ****. If you can only affort to learn one art, BJJ should be the LAST art you want to pick for street use. Stand up fighting should be your primary art, ground fighting should be a supplymental art.

I have talked to a few BJJers (instructors), and most of their mentality is that fights end up on the ground, therefore, you should learn to fight on the ground. Stand up fighting is inferior because BJJers can easily take you to the ground.......it is a very dangerous thing for a person to confuse sports with reality.

I've fought in groups before, me and my friends loved taking cheap shots. So do a lot of people. The reality is, fights are never fair, and never one on one.

If Bullshido means teachers or styles that falsely claim the teaching to be street effective, putting students in danger on the street because the teaching does not represent any real life situtation. Then I am calling Bullshido on BJJ schools, because the "marketing" does not reflect real life situations.

Footnote: I don't have a problem with BJJ (the art itself), just the marketing of the style.

One point that should get brought up before this goes too far is that most trained grappling (even BJJ) against an untrained opponent is not a waiting game like how it is normally seen. A skilled BJJ fighter would probably not wrestle around on the ground so much as go for a quick arm-break manuver or mount. A skilled BJJ fighter would (maybe should) have ended that fight in about 5-10 seconds.

I mean, that's like saying that boxing is not street effective because no street fight goes 12 rounds of 3-minutes each, and even in that first 3 minutes from friends will jump in. A boxer will ****-up and knock out an untrained opponent much more quickly, and be able to take enough damage to possibly knock-out some of his friends as well.